LaFayette offers Southern small-town charm

September 18th, 2011by Andrew Pantazi in Glimpse 2011

Mark Steele touches up the paint on the plaque in front of the John B. Gordon Hall in LaFayette, Ga. Steele, who has always held an interest in the Civil War, was happy to spend his time fixing up and donating to the hall.

Photo by
Jenna Walker/Times Free Press.

LaFayette, a Georgia city about a 45-minute drive south of Chattanooga, offers visitors Civil War history, Southern small-town charm and mountainous surroundings.

The city is the Walker County seat and home to Chattooga Academy, now the oldest brick school building in the state. Confederate Gen. John B. Gordon went to the Chattooga Academy when he was a boy, and later, near the end of the summer of 1863, it was Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg's base as he strategized for the Battle of Chickamauga.

Catherine Edgemon, the leader of downtown development in LaFayette, recommends that visitors also look at some of the art hanging in the Foothills Gallery. The gallery is sponsored by the Northwest Georgia Arts Guild and features works from artists around the area.

Steve and Peggy Simmons look for wildflowers along the side of the boardwalk on the Shirley Miller Wildflower Trail near LaFayette, Ga.

Photo by
Jake Daniels/Times Free Press.

C.J.'s Southern Traditions was named best lunch and best dinner in Walker County the past three years.

The gallery, school and restaurant all are located on Main Street and are within walking distance of each other.

"[LaFayette] is a little, small Southern town with the history of charm that you think of when you think of Southern towns," Edgemon said.

AT A GLANCE

Confederate flags are displayed on the headstones of Confederate veterans laid to rest in LaFayette Cemetery.

-- Historic info: Benton and Chattooga were early settlements at the site of present-day Lafayette. In 1836 the city was renamed after the Marquis de Lafayette, who helped American colonists during the Revolutionary War.

-- Most-famous residents: Spencer and Ruth Marsh, who built the antebellum Marsh House, now a historic attraction.